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MULTICHIP VERTICAL-EXTERNAL-CAVITY SURFACE- EMITTING LASERS: A COHERENT POWER SCALING SCHEME (POSTPRINT) Li Fan, Mahmoud Fallahi, Jörg Hader, Aramais R. Zakharian, Jerome V. Moloney, James T. Murray, Robert Bedford, Wolfgang Stolz, and Stephan W. Koch Electro-Optic Components Branch Aerospace Components and Subsystems Technology Division DECEMBER 2006 Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. See additional restrictions described on inside pages 2006 Optical Society of America STINFO COPY AIR FORCE RESEARCH LABORATORY SENSORS DIRECTORATE WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, OH 45433-7320 AIR FORCE MATERIEL COMMAND UNITED STATES AIR FORCE

REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE Form Approved OMB No. 0704-0188 The public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to Department of Defense, Washington Headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports (0704-0188), 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 1204, Arlington, VA 22202-4302. Respondents should be aware that notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person shall be subject to any penalty for failing to comply with a collection of information if it does not display a currently valid OMB control number. PLEASE DO NOT RETURN YOUR FORM TO THE ABOVE ADDRESS. 1. REPORT DATE (DD-MM-YY) 2. REPORT TYPE 3. DATES COVERED (From - To) December 2006 Journal Article Postprint 01 November 2006 15 December 2006 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE MULTICHIP VERTICAL-EXTERNAL-CAVITY SURFACE-EMITTING LASERS: A COHERENT POWER SCALING SCHEME (POSTPRINT) 6. AUTHOR(S) Li Fan and Mahmoud Fallahi (University of Arizona) Jörg Hader, Aramais R. Zakharian, and Jerome V. Moloney (University of Arizona) James T. Murray (Arete Associates) Robert Bedford (AFRL/RYDP) Wolfgang Stolz and Stephan W. Koch (Philips Universität Marburg) 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER In-house 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 62204F 5d. PROJECT NUMBER 2002 5e. TASK NUMBER IH 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 2002IH0E 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 --------------------------------------------- Arete Associates Tucson, AZ 85712 Electro-Optic Components Branch (AFRL/RYDP) Aerospace Components and Subsystems Technology Division Air Force Research Laboratory, Sensors Directorate Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH 45433-7320 Air Force Materiel Command, United States Air Force -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Philips Universität Marburg Department of Physics and Material, Sciences Center 35032 Marburg, Germany REPORT NUMBER 9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY ACRONYM(S) Air Force Research Laboratory Sensors Directorate Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH 45433-7320 Air Force Materiel Command United States Air Force 12. DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) AFRL/RYDP 11. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY REPORT NUMBER(S) 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES Journal article published in Optics Letters, Vol. 31, No. 24, December 15, 2006. 2006 Optical Society of America. The U.S. Government is joint author of this work and has the right to use, modify, reproduce, release, perform, display, or disclose the work. PAO Case Number: WPAFB 06-2045; Clearance date: 23 Aug 2006. Paper contains color. 14. ABSTRACT We propose an efficient coherent power scaling scheme, the multichip vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting laser (), in which the waste heat generated in the active region is distributed on multi- chips such that the pump level at the thermal rollover is significantly increased. The advantages of this laser are discussed, and the development and demonstration of a two-chip operating around 970 nm with over 19 W of output power is presented. 15. SUBJECT TERMS Lasers, semiconductors 16. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF: 17. LIMITATION a. REPORT b. ABSTRACT c. THIS PAGE OF ABSTRACT: SAR 18. NUMBER OF PAGES 10 19a. NAME OF RESPONSIBLE PERSON (Monitor) Robert Bedford 19b. TELEPHONE NUMBER (Include Area Code) N/A Standard Form 298 (Rev. 8-98) Prescribed by ANSI Std. Z39-18 i

3612 OPTICS LETTERS / Vol. 31, No. 24 / December 15, 2006 Multichip vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting lasers: a coherent power scaling scheme Li Fan and Mahmoud Fallahi College of Optical Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 Jörg Hader, Aramais R. Zakharian, and Jerome V. Moloney Arizona Center for Mathematical Science and College of Optical Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 James T. Murray Areté Associates, 3194 North Swan Road, Tucson, Arìzona 85712 Robert Bedford Air Force Research Laboratory, 2241 Avionics Cirde, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio 45433 Wolfgang Stolz and Stephan W. Koch Department of Physics and Material Sciences Center, Philipps Universität Marburg, Renthof 5, 35032 Marburg, Germany Received July 31, 2006; accepted September 13, 2006; posted September 21, 2006 (Doc. ID 73602); published November 22, 2006 We propose an efficient coherent power scaling scheme, the multichip vertical-external-cavity surfaceemitting laser (), in which the waste heat generated in the active region is distributed on multi- chips such that the pump level at the thermal rollover is significantly increased. The advantages of this laser are discussed, and the development and demonstration of a two-chip operating around 970 nm with over 19 W of output power is presented. 2006 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: 140.5960, 250.7270. Optically pumped semiconductor vertical-externalcavity surface-emitting lasers (s) are attractive owing to their high power, excellent beam quality, and large wavelength tunability. 1 However, the heating in the active region results in the thermal rollover and shut-off, 2 limiting their output power. Traditional power scaling of the is based on increasing the pump spot size and keeping the pump irradiance constant. However, recent research pointed out that amplified spontaneous emission in the epitaxial plane is another major power-limiting mechanism in s, especially for a large pump spot. 3 A larger pump spot also introduces more diffraction loss due to the surface roughness of the processed chip, increasing the threshold and decreasing the slope efficiency of the laser. 4 In addition, due to local quantum-well width fluctuations and composition fluctuations, as well as defects, more crystal inhomogenities may appear in a larger pump area, resulting in inhomogeneous broadening of the 5 ; that is, large spectral linewidth. 1 Laser beam combining is an effective way to achieve power scaling of the laser. Spectral beam combining (SBC) of s by using volume Bragg gratings 6 can maintain near-diffraction-limited beam quality, but the combined output is an incoherent multiwavelength beam. Coherent beam combining (CBC) provides coherent power scaling with extremely high far-field intensity. However, each combined laser is forced to operate at the same frequency and is phase locked by master slave coupling and self-feedback. 7 In addition, the coupling loss in the combining cascade structure decreases the efficiency of CBC. 8 Therefore it is not easy to maintain high efficiency CBC of lasers. Here we propose and demonstrate an efficient coherent power-scaling approach, the multichip, in which antireflection (AR)-coated chips serve as folding mirrors in a zigzag fold cavity such as the W-shaped cavity. Recently we studied the functions of the AR-coated chip serving as a folding mirror in a folded cavity 1,9 and found that if the folding angle within the chip is very small, the chip can provide not only resonant periodic gain (RPG), but also double the round-trip small-signal gain and eliminate the microcavity resonance for the. Compared with the single-chip, this multichip VEC- SEL has several potential advantages. (1) The heating is distributed on various chips instead of a single chip. The thermal rollover is delayed, since less pump power on each chip will be needed for achieving a high-power. Thus more pump power can be launched to the laser to achieve higherpower scaling than that of the single-chip. (2) The multichip has a much higher roundtrip small-signal gain than a single-chip. As a result, we can use an output coupler with low reflectance to increase the slope efficiency of the laser. (3) The output of a multichip is a stable coherent beam with good beam quality that is easily controlled by the fold cavity. In this Letter, we 0146-9592/06/243612-3/$15.00 2006 Optical Society of America 1

December 15, 2006 / Vol. 31, No. 24 / OPTICS LETTERS 3613 Fig. 1. (Color online) Schematic of a two-chip with a symmetric W-shaped cavity. Relative dimensions not to scale. HR, highly reflective. present the development and demonstration of a twochip operating around 970 nm to prove the concept of the multichip. In the experiment two slightly different chips are used. They are designed for emission around 975 nm and grown by metal organic vapor phase epitaxy on an undoped GaAs substrate. Active regions of chip 1 and chip 2 consist of 14 and 10 InGaAs compressive strained quantum wells, respectively. Each quantum well is 8 nm thick and surrounded by GaAsP strain compensation layers and AlGaAs pump-absorbing barriers. The thickness and composition of the layers are optimized such that each quantum well is positioned at an antinode of the cavity standing wave to provide RPG. A high-reflecting R 99.9% distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) stack made of 25 pairs of AlGaAs/AlAs is grown on the top of the active region. In addition to the RPG active region and DBR stack, there is a high aluminum concentration AlGaAs etch-stop layer between the active region and the substrate to facilitate selective chemical substrate removal. The epitaxial side of the wafer is mounted on chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond by indium solder. After the removal of the GaAs substrate and etchstop layer, a single-layer Si 3 N 4 (n=1.78 at 980 nm) quarter-wave low-reflection coating (for a 975 nm signal) is deposited on the surface of the chip to achieve a reflectivity of less than 1% at the signal wavelength and 3% at 808 nm pump wavelength. A symmetric W-shaped cavity as illustrated in Fig. 1 is designed for this two-chip. In the cavity, the radius of curvature (ROC) of the concaved spherical folding mirror is 30 cm, and the full folding angle is about 15. The distance between the concaved mirror and the chip is around 24 cm, and the highly reflective flat mirror (or flat output coupler) is 4.5 cm away from the chip. This cavity configuration defines TEM 00 mode size on both chips: 350 m diameter (tangential) and 360 m diameter (sagittal). Two 808 nm pump lasers (not shown in Fig. 1) launch 19.4 W pump power into chip 1 and 42.1 W pump power into chip 2, respectively. To balance the pump density and match the mode size on both chips, the pump spot size is about 410 m in diameter on chip 1 and 480 m on chip 2. The pump spot size on chip 2 is much larger than the mode size, resulting in highorder transverse mode oscillation when pump density is high. The concaved spherical mirror results in a difference between the tangential and sagittal focal lengths, making the laser beam asymmetric (elliptical). To decrease this asymmetry, the folding angle at the concaved spherical mirror must be kept as small as possible. A tilted plate such as a birefringent filter can be incorporated in the focused region of the cavity, as shown in Table 1, to compensate for the astigmatism due to the nonnormal incidence on the curved mirror. To take advantage of RPG, the folding angle on both chips should be kept as small as possible. To compare the performance of the single-chip and the two-chip and to optimize the operation condition for the two-chip, before the experiment of two-chip, processed chip 1 and chip 2 are characterized at 0 C (heat sink temperature) with a linear cavity (pump spot size, 500 m diameter; ROC of the output coupler, 30 cm, and cavity length, 21 cm), respectively. The best results are achieved from each when the output coupler with the reflectance of 97% is employed. The results are listed in Table 1 and shown in Fig. 2. The lasing wavelength of 1 is 3.9 nm shorter than that of 2. To achieve the best performance of the two-chip, we have to tune the modal gain peaks of chip 1 and chip 2 such that they overlap, by adjusting the temperature and distribution of the pump power on each chip. During the measurement, the lasing spectrum is monitored by an optical spectral analyzer. We find that the two-chip gives the best performance when the lasing spectrum has a narrow linewidth. To extract more output power and delay the thermal rollover, we cool both chips below room temperature (chip 2 is mounted on a 5 C and chip 1 on a 0 C heat sink, respectively). The reflectance of the two output couplers used in our experiments are 95% and 91%. When the 95% output coupler is used in the dual-chip, the measured threshold pump power is approximately 5.8 W and the slope efficiency is 0.33. However, when the 91% output coupler is used, the threshold increases to approximately 12 W and the slope efficiency improved to 0.44. Figure 2 shows the output of the two-chip as a function of the total absorbed pump power on two chips when the output coupler with 91% reflectance is used. The maximum output power is pump power limited since the pump Table 1. Comparison of the Best Performance of Single-Chip and Two-Chip s Laser 1 2 Two-chip Threshold pump 6.13 5.42 12.9 power (W) Slope efficiency 0.42 0.41 0.44 Saturated output (W) 11.0 10.2 19.2 Lasing wavelength 963.9 967.8 966.0 at the threshold (nm) M 2 factor at the maximum output 1.75 1.71 2.14 2

3614 OPTICS LETTERS / Vol. 31, No. 24 / December 15, 2006 Fig. 2. (Color online) Output power of 1, VEC- SEL 2, and two-chip versus total absorbed 808 nm pump power. Fig. 3. (Color online) Beam quality factor (M 2 factor) versus the output power of the two-chip. laser for chip 1 only provides maximum pump power of 19.4 W. However, due to the unbalanced pump power on both chips (19.4 W pump power on chip 1 and 42 W pump power on chip 2), unavoidable overheat on chip 2 is responsible for the saturation of output power of the two-chip. Figure 3 shows that the beam quality factor (M 2 factor) changes with the increase of output power. The three-dimensional far-field beam profiles are also inserted in Fig. 3. There is degradation in the beam quality. When output power is over 19 W, the laser operates in TEM 01 mode. This is because the pump spot size is much larger than the mode size. Also, the laser beam is slightly elliptical owing to the folding angle on the concaved spherical mirror. However, the beam quality can be improved by reducing pump spot size on chip 2 such that it matches the TEM 00 mode size. If the total pump power of 66 W were to be evenly launched on both chips, the saturation of output power should be avoided, and based on the slope efficiency of 0.44, the output power of the two-chip should be over 21 W (see Fig. 2). In comparison with the ideal (lossless) CBC and SBC of two single-chip s made of chip 1 and chip 2, respectively, where 21 W output power may be achieved by launching total pump power of 66 W (see Fig. 2), the performance of the two-chip shows its coherent power scaling advantage over the CBC and SBC of two single-chip s. Thus the multichip can be an efficient coherent power scaling scheme. Similar two-chip optically pumped semiconductor lasers have also been implemented by Coherent Inc. 10 In summary, we present the development and demonstration of a two-chip with over 19 W of output power to prove the concept of the multichip. The multichip distributes the waste heat on each chip such that more pump power can be launched into chips before the laser reaches its thermal rollover. The best performance is achieved when the peak of the modal gain spectrum of each chip is tuned to overlap. The performance of the two-chip shows the potential of the multichip in coherent power scaling. Consequently, we propose the multichip as an efficient coherent power scaling scheme. This work is supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research through a Multidisciplinary Research Initiative Program F49620-02-1-0380. The Marburg part of the work is supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. The Air Force Research Laboratory part of the work is funded by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research through Laboratory Research Initiation Request grant 96SN01COR. J. V. Moloney acknowledges support from the Alexander von Humboldt Society. L. Fan s e-mail address is lifan@optics.arizona.edu. References 1. L. Fan, M. Fallahi, J. T. Murray, R. Bedford, Y. Kaneda, J. Hader, A. R. Zakharian, J. V. Moloney, S. W. Koch, and W. Stolz, Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 021105 (2006). 2. A. R. Zakharian, J. Hader, J. V. Moloney, S. W. Koch, P. Brick, and S. Lutgen, Appl. Phys. Lett. 83, 1313 (2003). 3. R. G. Bedford, M. Kolesik, J. L. A. Chilla, M. K. Reed, T. R. Nelson, and J. V. Moloney, in Proc. SPIE 5814, 199 208 (2005). 4. L. Fan, M. Fallahi, J. Hader, A. R. Zakharian, M. Kolesik, J. V. Moloney, T. Qiu, A. Schulzgen, N. Peyghambarian, S. W. Koch, W. Stolz, and J. T. Murray, Appl. Phys. Lett. 86, 211116 (2005). 5. J. Hader, J. V. Moloney, S. W. Koch, and W. W. Chow, IEEE J. Sel. Top. Quantum Electron. 9, 688 (2003). 6. Y. Kaneda, L. Fan, T. C. Hsu, M. Fallahi, J. T. Murray, R. Bedford, J. Hader, A. R. Zakharian, J. V. Moloney, S. W. Koch, and W. Stolz, IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 18, 1795 (2006). 7. S. J. Augst, T. Y. Fan, and A. Sanchez, Opt. Lett. 29, 474 (2004). 8. G. L. Schuster and J. R. Andrews, Appl. Opt. 34, 6802 (1995). 9. L. Fan, T. C. Hsu, M. Fallahi, J. T. Murray, R. Bedford, Y. Kaneda, J. Hader, A. R. Zakharian, J. V. Moloney, S. W. Koch, and W. Stolz, Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 251117 (2006). 10. Colin Seaton, Coherent Inc., Santa Clara, Calif. (private communication). 3